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Video Games, Web

Flash Games We Love: Run and Jump With 'Canabalt'



As connoisseurs of the flash game, we come across a lot of underwhelming, but free, time-wasters. Much like the balance of flavors in fine wine, the well-crafted online game perfectly harmonizes replay value, competitive drive, and sweat-inducing thrill. 'Canabalt,' a seemingly simple, side-scrolling, run-and-jump game, is all the more impressive due to its single input button: Jump!

Designed with retro 8-bit graphics, reminiscent of an old NES system, the sole object of 'Canabalt' is to run as far as possible. You jog and jump from rooftop to rooftop, gaining speed as you leap over boxes (which slow you down) and earth-shattering rockets. Death comes by missing the next ledge or colliding with rockets, so strategy consists largely of keeping calm and timing your jumps. Once you fall, a brand new level is dynamically created, meaning you'll never play the same level twice.

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Audio/Video, Web

Ames's Window Optical Illusion Will Blow Your Mind

Need something of an eye-opener on a dreary Wednesday afternoon? Check out the above video demonstration of the Ames window, a compelling optical illusion featuring a trapezoidal window with an angled bar bisecting it as a sort of reference point. As the odd-shaped window rotates, the bar occasionally, and magically, appears to pass right through the frame while the window seems to reverse its rotation.

The illusion was created by American scientist Adelbert Ames, Jr., a researcher at the Dartmouth Eye Institute and creator of a number of mind-bending visual tricks like this. This window is his most mind-warping illusion, and it's easy to see why. Despite how it appears to the eye, the frame is always physically rotating in one direction -- it's just the mind that gets confused by its shape. Now, feel free to go ahead and get another cup of coffee after watching this a few times. Or several more cups of coffee after watching these, too. [From: YouTube, via Kottke.org]

3 More Optical Illusions You Just Gotta See



We here at Switched have found some great optical illusions online in the past. We are always on the lookout for more, so we were delighted when we came across these three illusions below, thanks to Inside Science News. Just last weekend, these three illusions were chosen as the world's best at a gathering of neuroscientists and psychologists in Naples, Florida. Enjoy!

1. Jerky Curveball - The title says it all. Do this one in two stages. First, stare directly at the spinning ball. On the next pass, try concentrating on the little blue dot to the right of the screen. You will understand immediately how and why this illusion got its name. Pretty trippy.

2. Colored Dove - This one didn't particularly do it for us, but the boys and girls down in Naples thought highly enough of it to rank it number two. Simply stare at the black dot in the middle of the white dove and wait for the red flash. The dove remains colored after the flash thanks to your eyes retaining an afterimage. Interesting? No Doubt. Number two? We have our reservations...

3. Sex Illusion- Sit back, relax, and get your mind out of the gutter. This simple illusion, courtesy of Richard Russell of Harvard University, consists of two pictures of the same person's face. However, each photo has been digitally altered by adjusting the light and dark places in the image, which makes one face look like a boy's and the other a girl's. It's a great effect, and it provides a succinct little study into gender perception. Isn't learning fun? [From: Inside Science News Service, via Livescience]

Video Games, Webware

Control the Weather in New Web Game

In case you haven't blown your weekend yet by diving into the ADD-wonderland that is the Internet, we recommend you check out 'Effing Hail,' a free online flash game.

The concept is simple enough: Move a cursor with the mouse, and click down to control the wind. A continuous stream of hail falls from the sky, and these lumps of ice will grow larger (and harder to control) as you balance them underneath a cushion of wind in the sky. Release the mouse and the hail will fall to the ground.

The object? Gain points by guiding your (hopefully) enormous piece of hail towards the unsuspecting buildings below. Keep your headphones on because the sleazy electro-Europop beats in the background feel as though they're essential to gameplay, or so we've discovered after wasting an hour pummeling edifices great and small.

Plus, you don't want anyone in the office knowing what you're really doing.
[Effing Hail via Kottke.org]

Video Games, Webware, Web

Save Captain Phillips From Pirates in New Web Game

Save Captain Phillips in Web Game

You have to wonder. Is there any heroic act taking place in the world that won't soon be turned into a tasteless, online, Flash-based game? We saw it most recently with the Hudson River landing, the real-life pilot's challenge-of-a-lifetime turned into a game so simple a monkey could play. Now, it's the story of Captain Phillips, the US hero who stood up to Somalian pirates recently, that's getting the Flash treatment in Saving Captain Phillips, a game that's slightly more difficult, but no more entertaining.

In the game, you get an overhead view of Captain Phillips's lifeboat, which, for some reason, is motoring around in circles between the beach and the Navy vessel. You're allowed as many shots as needed to take out the pirates, and, once your mission is accomplished, you hear some climactic music as you behold pixelated graphics of the captain and one of his rescuers. Fail to shoot the snipers and all you see is "Mission Incomplete."

Fitting tribute? Hardly. Fun? No, not really. Last of its kind? Not a chance. [From: Games2Win, Via: Joystiq]

Web, Social Networking

Secretly Tweet at Work with New Fake Spreadsheet App



Yes, Twitter is now officially inescapable, especially now that the one-and-only Oprah has blessed the wildly popular (and hyped) microblogging service with her magic touch. Even if you're using Twitter on your phone, it's not easy to tweet while at work; Twitter's now-iconic page design is instantly recognizable from across a large room. Fortunately for you cubicle dwellers out there, a free new app (pictured above) melds the boss-appealing and productivity-enhancing visual appeal of spreadsheets with -- what else -- Twitter.

Spreadtweet converts your twittering activity into a mundane Microsoft Excel-esque spreadsheet, and we've been hard at work testing the app out here at the office. Our research shows that unless you're a few inches away from the monitor, there's no way to tell the spreadsheet is actually a Twitter client. The dock icon even looks like Excel! This saves us from having to perform the highly suspicious-looking "minimize all open windows" routine whenever anyone walks by.

Ready to dive in? Spreadtweet is an Adobe AIR application, which means it will run on Mac, Windows, and Linux, and, even better, you can choose from the smooth look of Office for OS X, retro Office 2003 (Windows), or the seemingly ubiquitous Office 2007 (Windows). [From: ElliotKember via: BusinessInsider]

Audio/Video, Computers, Video Games, Google

YouTube Offers 'Spot the Difference' Oscars Game


A few months back, Google unveiled the ability to embed links and notes within videos on YouTube. While the usefulness of the new tool wasn't lost on anyone, the level of interactivity it allows may have been overlooked at first.

But a YouTube user known as copyrighthater has built a complex, video-based, photo-hunt game using these often overlooked tools. The game is divided into 30 "levels" -- timed videos that place two images of Oscar nominees side by side and ask you to spot the difference. Each part of the image is an annotated link; click the correct part and you'll be taken to the next level, or video.

The difficulty ramps up pretty quickly, but it's actually quite fun to play. We're excited to see how much more interactivity can be crammed into what is normally a passive experience -- watching kids act like fools. [From: Mashable]

Related links:

Cell Phones, iPod, iPhone, Mobile Software, Downloads

Remember 'HotorNot?' It's Back as an iPhone App



It's about darn time. HotorNot.com, that wildly popular time-waster from the early days of the Web, is finally coming to the iPhone, and we could not be more relieved. All those days we spent walking aimlessly around the city with no one to superficially rate... It was torture! Feel free to rate away with the new free iPhone app that allows you to meet and rate people in your area (there is a GPS feature that narrows down your search region), or anywhere in the world.

For those of you who don't know, HotorNot.com is a place where people (or their pictures) are rated 1-10 on their hotness. You can also e-mail featured hotties and send them e-gifts. HotorNot's simplicity is probably its biggest attribute -- for those of you in search of deeper relationships, you may want to pass. If, however, you're looking for a fling, or someone who likes to laugh a lot and chill at the beach (as almost everyone on the site does), why the heck not? [From: textually.org]

Computers

How Many Online "Breaks" Do You Take Every Day?

Internet's Many Diversions Offer Escapes for Busy Workers

In the "old" days (oh about 15 years ago, or thereabouts), if you wanted to take a break from work, you had to go out for a smoke, head off for a cup of coffee, or saunter on over to the water-cooler. These days, if you have five minutes to decompress before diving into your next hour-long task, you're just a few clicks away from a smile and some good thoughts online. It's a trend that, many think, is a more productive and healthful way to work.

Whether looking at playful puppies or silly cat pictures, most workers find these online distractions quickly get their minds off of work issues and ramp the stress level down. We're big fans of the online micro-break, though unfortunately many employers still frown upon personal time spent surfing. It seems most would probably agree that a few minutes clicking around at silly pictures is better than getting burnt out -- or taking up smoking. [From: USA Today]

How many online "breaks" to you take per day?

Computers, Editor's Picks, MySpace, Windows Software

Create 3-D Version of Yourself, Then Take Said Self Online



It could be argued that one of the biggest hurdles in the way of creating compelling shared online experiences is the fact that digital avatars look nothing like the people controlling them. A Pasadena, CA-based company called Big Stage Entertainment is trying to change that, and its solution is to enable anyone to quickly create a realistic 3-D version of themselves, which can then be used online in a variety of applications.

Using Big Stage Entertainment's proprietary technology, users can create their own free, animated 3-D avatar (the company is calling them "@ctors"). Just snap a few quick pictures of yourself on your digital camera and upload them; to create and view @ctors in action, you'll need to install the Big Stage Media Player (on your PC -- no Mac version, yet). You can then customize your avatar's look (read: hair, glasses, clothing), and then project them onto your social network sites, into video clips -- pretty much anywhere you like.

Of course, don't expect your own personalized Marcus Phoenix -- high-quality facial models take many man-hours of work. Still, for the applications involved, it's pretty cool stuff: it's easy to get your model online and in action (the results are not unlike those in games like 'Rainbow Six Vegas,' which employed similar technology). Check out the video above, and then go reinvent your digital self. To paraphrase Michael Jackson, it all starts with the man in the mirror. [From: Big Stage Entertainment]

Car Tech, Computers, Celebrities

Creepy BabyMaker3000 Actually Being Used to Make Virtual Babies



As we inch ever closer to a future in which our babies are exactly what we want them to be, German car manufacturer Volkswagen has put together a nifty little preview in the form of a promotional Web app. Just upload pictures of yourself and your loved one (or celebrities who you've never met), set the key points (eyes, mouth, nose, etc..), and watch the magic unfold.

According to VW's PR team, the BabyMaker3000 has brought 314,384 digital babies into the world since going live a month ago -- surpassing the number of real babies born in the U.S. during a comparable timeframe (295,075). An estimated half million visitors have checked out the site, a pretty mind-boggling number that probably says something about our desire for this type of technology in the real world.

In case you were wondering, the above virtual baby belongs to one Barack Obama and one newly divorced baby mama, Madonna. We're naming him Barack Hussein Madonna-Obama-Rama, and no, you can't take his photograph, filthy paparazzi. [From: VW.com]

Video Games

Top 11 Free Brain Games

Not all video games are bad for you. In fact, most video games actually engage different parts of your brain to help develop logic, decision-making, mental speed, and even creativity. Now, a new trend in gaming called "brain games" aims at actually training your noodle to help you improve your mental facilities. Problem is, many of these games require some sort of site subscirption fee or even a Nintendo DS to play "Brain Age".

Fear not, dear Switched reader. We scoured the net to find 11 of the best brain games -- and even better, they're all free.

1. WordCrunch

WordCrunch Brain Game

WordCrunch is your basic word-search game, but it changes themes on a daily basis. This one is easy to learn but tough to master. This is the ultimate test of your vocabulary, mental speed, and visual acuity.

Computers, Top Lists, Slideshows

Top 25 Optical Illusions on the Web



Most of you have looked and/or fretted over optical illusions at some point in your life. A select few have even had a sleepless night over particularly difficult ones. They come in all shapes and sizes and colors. Double meanings, motion-induced blindness, and mind bending perspective distortion just to name a few. Here, we have compiled a list of some of our favorite illusions on the Web. Some are simple and thought provoking. Others, well, they just make you thankful that you are sitting down. Now take a break and blow your mind.

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